First post, let's start with a small introduction.
I am a Dutch guy that likes to venture away from the black top now and then. I am not a racer or motocrosser. Before I got kids I did a lot of greenlaning, went to Morocco, etcetera. I did those things on bikes like Kawasaki KLX650R, KTM LC4 Adventure, etcetera.
After I got kids, motorcycling went on at a slower pace. I sold all the bikes and replaced them with a KTM 950 Adventure with an extra set of wheels equipped with knobby tires. That bike is simply amazing; I can ride it everywhere I want. Twisty roads chasing sports bikes, no problem. Muddy Dutch trails, no problem. Steep, slippery, rocky hills in France, can do. It takes 10 times as much energy as a lighter bike and in tight stuff I am slower than my friends on 450cc bikes, but I'll get there.
Last offroad riding trip to France I went down. A steep dowslope with lots of football-sized rocks and branches hanging over the trail. One of those branches got my handlebars, and down I went. Bike on top of me, foot rotated 180 degrees under the bike, unable to get out under it, had to wait for my friends to remove the bike. Not much physical damage done luckily; slightly sprained ankle only.
That day I was lucky to ride on a TTR600 from the local guy, and not on the 950.....
So, I went shopping for a lighter bike. Always wanted a 2-stroke just to see if I like them, and with old 4-strokes you always have problems with the head. Oil pumps wear, and the first part of the engine that suffers is the head. Been there, done that, multiple times. Makes that $1000 bike an expensive one.
Since I am mostly trail riding and not involved in any competition the KDX250 was my first choice, but these are rare in The Netherlands. Then I read about the Husqvarna WR360: 'A KDX on steroids'. Wide-range 6-speed gearbox, more bottom-end grunt. Sounds great.
So, after visiting a few sellers I got one:
Bike is a 1998 WR360 in fair condition that has 5500km on the odometer. Engine seems OK, but basically every bearing that comes in contact with water is shot. Like this:
Even the balls in the grease nipples have rotten away. I knew this when I bought the bike and used it to talk down the price.
So I am waiting for a LOT of bearings and seals to come in...
Also running in other small problems like this:
Already better:
Another small issue:
Fixed:
And so on. All parts seem to clean nicely and be quite undamaged or worn.
[/img]https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/2762301/WR360/WR360_voorvorkschoon.jpg[/img]
I am not converting this bike into a beauty queen by the way, but unless you clean the parts well it is impossible to inspect them.
Now for the questions:
- I can find plenty of workshop manuals online, but not for the '97-'98 model. Most of the time this is not a problem, but it is for the 50mm conventional Marzocchi forks. I would need some service information for these forks. Things like air chamber length, basic setting of the rebound adjuster (and does it have a compression adjuster? Didn't find it yet unless it is under the bolt at the bottom of the forks). Also 'things to watch out for': I changed the oil, stroked the inner tube until no more air bubbles appeared, but now it seems to lack compression damping...
- The bike is not running well in the first 1/4 of the throttle range. It 'blubbers' and 4-strokes a lot, and I have to open the throttle a little to get it to start. I took the TM38 carburettor off, cleaned it (was not very dirty), assembled it making sure there were no air leaks, and did a few plug chops with fresh spark plugs gapped at 0,5mm.
2-strokes are fairly new to me, but it seems to be OK on tha main jet and needle.
Full throttle through all 6 gears:
At half throttle the plug is a bit darker, but not much.
I tried playing with the air screw, and it seems to run best at 2 1/4 turn out. When going further out the RPM's start to hang a bit before dropping back to idle, with the default 1 1/2 turn out the bike almost dies before coming back to idle. But also with 2 1/4 turn out I need to start without choke, throttle slightly opened, and it doesn't run well in the first 1/4 of the throttle.
I wonder what I shoudl do next?
I am a Dutch guy that likes to venture away from the black top now and then. I am not a racer or motocrosser. Before I got kids I did a lot of greenlaning, went to Morocco, etcetera. I did those things on bikes like Kawasaki KLX650R, KTM LC4 Adventure, etcetera.
After I got kids, motorcycling went on at a slower pace. I sold all the bikes and replaced them with a KTM 950 Adventure with an extra set of wheels equipped with knobby tires. That bike is simply amazing; I can ride it everywhere I want. Twisty roads chasing sports bikes, no problem. Muddy Dutch trails, no problem. Steep, slippery, rocky hills in France, can do. It takes 10 times as much energy as a lighter bike and in tight stuff I am slower than my friends on 450cc bikes, but I'll get there.
Last offroad riding trip to France I went down. A steep dowslope with lots of football-sized rocks and branches hanging over the trail. One of those branches got my handlebars, and down I went. Bike on top of me, foot rotated 180 degrees under the bike, unable to get out under it, had to wait for my friends to remove the bike. Not much physical damage done luckily; slightly sprained ankle only.
That day I was lucky to ride on a TTR600 from the local guy, and not on the 950.....
So, I went shopping for a lighter bike. Always wanted a 2-stroke just to see if I like them, and with old 4-strokes you always have problems with the head. Oil pumps wear, and the first part of the engine that suffers is the head. Been there, done that, multiple times. Makes that $1000 bike an expensive one.
Since I am mostly trail riding and not involved in any competition the KDX250 was my first choice, but these are rare in The Netherlands. Then I read about the Husqvarna WR360: 'A KDX on steroids'. Wide-range 6-speed gearbox, more bottom-end grunt. Sounds great.
So, after visiting a few sellers I got one:

Bike is a 1998 WR360 in fair condition that has 5500km on the odometer. Engine seems OK, but basically every bearing that comes in contact with water is shot. Like this:

Even the balls in the grease nipples have rotten away. I knew this when I bought the bike and used it to talk down the price.
So I am waiting for a LOT of bearings and seals to come in...
Also running in other small problems like this:

Already better:

Another small issue:

Fixed:

And so on. All parts seem to clean nicely and be quite undamaged or worn.

[/img]https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/2762301/WR360/WR360_voorvorkschoon.jpg[/img]
I am not converting this bike into a beauty queen by the way, but unless you clean the parts well it is impossible to inspect them.
Now for the questions:
- I can find plenty of workshop manuals online, but not for the '97-'98 model. Most of the time this is not a problem, but it is for the 50mm conventional Marzocchi forks. I would need some service information for these forks. Things like air chamber length, basic setting of the rebound adjuster (and does it have a compression adjuster? Didn't find it yet unless it is under the bolt at the bottom of the forks). Also 'things to watch out for': I changed the oil, stroked the inner tube until no more air bubbles appeared, but now it seems to lack compression damping...
- The bike is not running well in the first 1/4 of the throttle range. It 'blubbers' and 4-strokes a lot, and I have to open the throttle a little to get it to start. I took the TM38 carburettor off, cleaned it (was not very dirty), assembled it making sure there were no air leaks, and did a few plug chops with fresh spark plugs gapped at 0,5mm.
2-strokes are fairly new to me, but it seems to be OK on tha main jet and needle.
Full throttle through all 6 gears:

At half throttle the plug is a bit darker, but not much.
I tried playing with the air screw, and it seems to run best at 2 1/4 turn out. When going further out the RPM's start to hang a bit before dropping back to idle, with the default 1 1/2 turn out the bike almost dies before coming back to idle. But also with 2 1/4 turn out I need to start without choke, throttle slightly opened, and it doesn't run well in the first 1/4 of the throttle.
I wonder what I shoudl do next?